Title: Can We Make Machine Learning Safe for Safety-Critical Systems?
Abstract:
The impressive new capabilities of systems created using deep learning are encouraging engineers to apply these techniques in safety-critical applications such as medicine, aeronautics, and self-driving cars. This talk will discuss the ways that machine learning
methodologies are changing to operate in safety-critical systems. These changes include (a) building high-fidelity simulators for the domain, (b) adversarial collection of training data to ensure coverage of the so-called Operational Design Domain (ODD) and,
specifically, the hazardous regions within the ODD, (c) methods for verifying that the fitted models generalize well, and (d) methods for estimating the probability of harms in normal operation. There are many research challenges to achieving these.
But we must do more, because traditional safety engineering only addresses the known hazards. We must design our systems to detect novel hazards as well. We adopt Leveson’s view of safety as an ongoing hierarchical control problem in which controls are put
in place to stabilize the system against disturbances. Disturbances include novel hazards but also management changes such as budget cuts, staff turnover, novel regulations, and so on. Traditionally, it has been the human operators and managers who have provided
these stabilizing controls. Are there ways that AI methods, such as novelty detection, near-miss detection, diagnosis and repair, can be applied to help the human organization manage these disturbances and maintain system safety?
Bio: Dr. Dietterich is University Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Oregon State University. Dietterich is one of the pioneers of the field of Machine Learning
and has authored more than 220 refereed publications and two books. His current research topics include robust artificial intelligence, robust human-AI systems, and applications in sustainability.
Dietterich is the 2025 recipient of the Feigenbaum prize for applied AI and the 2024 recipient of the IJCAI Award for Research Excellence. Dietterich is also the recipient of the 2022 AAAI Distinguished Service Award and the 2020 ACML Distinguished Contribution
Award, both recognizing his many years of service to the research community. He is a former President of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence and the founding president of the International Machine Learning Society. Other major roles
include Executive Editor of the journal Machine Learning, co-founder of the Journal for Machine Learning Research, and program chair of AAAI 1990 and NIPS 2000. He currently chairs the Computer Science Section of
arXiv.org.